WILLIAM H. PAULEY, III, District Judge.
Lead Plaintiff Mark Youngers,
The motion to amend principally aims to cure the deficiencies that hobbled Plaintiffs' previous attempt to certify the class—namely, that new information obtained in discovery supports an omissions-based claim entitling Plaintiffs to a presumption of reliance for class certification. For the reasons that follow, the motion to amend is denied.
After litigating this putative securities fraud class action for nearly two and a half years, Plaintiffs now seek to file a fourth iteration of their complaint styled as the Third Amended Complaint. Although their request comes on the heels of this Court's decision denying class certification, Plaintiffs contend that new facts obtained during discovery warrant amendment. To place the motion in context, a recitation of the relevant procedural history is necessary.
On January 4, 2016, Plaintiffs filed a Second Amended Complaint.
Discovery commenced in August 2016. In a Scheduling Order jointly proposed by the parties and entered by this Court, the Defendants agreed to disclose "substantially all documents previously produced in government investigations concerning Virtus's AlphaSector funds by September 12, 2016." (ECF No. 122, ¶ 6.) According to Defendants, they provided Plaintiffs with over 3.2 million pages of documents previously produced to the SEC. (Def. Opposition to Motion to Amend ("Opp."), ECF No. 175, at 7-8.)
Separately, in December 2016, Newfound Research—the entity with which the Defendants sought to replace F-Squared as sub-advisor to the AlphaSector Funds—made a document production of its own to Plaintiffs. That production included SEC deposition transcripts of Corey Hoffstein, the college intern who devised the AlphaSector trading algorithm, and Tom Rosedale, the CEO of Newfound Research.
On January 6, 2017—while discovery was underway in this action—the Lead Plaintiff in
In March 2017, Defendants made another document production containing a communication dated October 2013 where F-Squared's counsel notified Virtus of the SEC's investigation into F-Squared concerning the use of an inaccurate AlphaSector indices track record. The communication further reflects that F-Squared would remove such information from its marketing materials. (Def. Memo. of Law in Support of Motion to Amend ("Mot."), ECF No. 169, at 3.) Plaintiffs contend that F-Squared's communication coincided with Virtus's publication of a new prospectus which also removed that track record—a fact that further supports their contention that Aylward and VIP knew, if not as early as July 2013, then at the latest October 2013, that the AlphaSector indices track record was inaccurate. (Mot. at 3.)
The parties completed fact discovery in June 2017. In sum, over 25 fact depositions were conducted and more than 4 million pages were produced by Defendants. (Opp. at 8.) And in August 2017, shortly after this motion was filed, the parties completed expert discovery.
On November 7, 2016, concurrent with discovery, Plaintiffs moved for class certification. On January 16, 2017—shortly after Plaintiffs received the critical SEC deposition transcripts in question—Defendants filed their opposition to class certification. On February 17, 2017, Plaintiffs replied. At the beginning of March 2017, this Court heard oral argument on the class certification motion.
In May 2017, this Court denied Plaintiffs' motion for class certification largely on the basis that Plaintiffs failed to satisfy Rule 23's predominance requirement. Because the Second Amended Complaint was "primarily built around misrepresentations, [and] omissions, if any[,] [only] serve[d] to exacerbate and bolster [those] misrepresentation claims," this Court held that Plaintiffs were not entitled to a presumption of reliance under
On June 12, 2017—just a few weeks after this Court denied class certification— Plaintiffs filed a pre-motion conference letter seeking leave to amend their complaint. (ECF No. 150.) In their letter application, Plaintiffs asserted that new facts unearthed in discovery, would "advance several causes of action that . . . [would] cure deficiencies identified" by this Court's decisions regarding the Defendants' motion to dismiss and Plaintiffs' motion for class certification. (ECF No. 150 at 1.) Notwithstanding its initial misgivings about permitting amendment at this juncture in the litigation, this Court fixed a briefing schedule. On September 7, 2017, the parties appeared for oral argument.
Normally, a motion to amend is evaluated under Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides that amendment "shall be freely given when justice so requires." Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a). However, once a scheduling order has been entered in an action, Rule 16(b) governs a motion to amend.
Under Rule 16(b), a scheduling order "shall not be modified except upon a showing of good cause . . . ." Good cause exists when a party can demonstrate that the scheduling deadline—here, the date by which the Second Amended Complaint should have been filed
Plaintiffs cite to two categories of evidence that they lacked at the time the Second Amended Complaint was filed: (1) Aylward and Waltman's SEC deposition testimony; and (2) a copy of an October 2013 communication from F-Squared notifying Defendants that it was under investigation by the SEC. According to Plaintiffs, these documents contain new facts that significantly alter their theory of liability. Both the SEC deposition transcripts and F-Squared's October 2013 communication reveal that VIP and Aylward learned—as early as July 2013 and at the latest October 2013—that previously filed track records of the AlphaSector Indices contained a calculation error, rendering the track record false during the entire period they were published. Plaintiffs claim that once VIP and Aylward learned of these calculation errors, they had a duty to correct the inaccurate track records.
Defendants assert that the facts and theory on which Plaintiffs seek to amend their complaint were incorporated into the Second Amended Complaint. Additionally, Defendants argue that the factual support for a "duty to correct" claim could have been gleaned from other publicly available documents that Plaintiffs relied on extensively in drafting the Second Amended Complaint. Indeed, the complaint in
The key question here then is whether, at the time of the Second Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs had the information to assert a duty to correct claim against the Defendants they now target in their proposed amendment. Put another way, good cause to amend would not exist if the Plaintiffs possessed information of a similar nature found in the SEC deposition transcripts or F-Squared's October 2013 communication yet failed to assert a duty to correct claim against Aylward and VIP in their Second Amended Complaint.
As a preliminary matter, that facts on which the Plaintiffs seek to amend their complaint were discovered in SEC deposition transcripts—documents so fundamentally and obviously germane to both the subject matter and claims in this securities fraud action—begs the question as to why Plaintiffs never requested these transcripts. While Plaintiffs claim that these documents "were not included in Defendants' initial production of documents that Defendants were ordered to produce by September 12, 2016" pursuant to the August 2016 Scheduling Order (Mot. at 2), the particular paragraph in question simply directs the Defendants to "produce substantially all documents previously produced in government investigations." (ECF No. 122, ¶ 6.) It encompasses documents produced
Moreover, in December 2016—nearly four months after discovery began— Newfound Research produced SEC deposition transcripts of Corey Hoffstein and Tom Rosedale. (McGovern Decl. ¶ 7.) Receiving some SEC deposition transcripts raises the question why Plaintiffs did not request
Nevertheless, though the Plaintiffs could have acted sooner to obtain these critical documents, they could not have done so prior to either the January 4, 2016 deadline set forth in the November 2015 Scheduling Order or at any period referenced in the August 2016 Scheduling Order. While it is true that the Second Amended Complaint alleges the back-tested results of the AlphaSector indices were miscalculated, there is no specific indication that either Aylward or VIP discovered those errors as early as July 2013. The Second Amended Complaint alleges, in relevant part, that the "Defendants [ ] concealed the fact that the back-test was performed incorrectly and contained a performance error, leading to grossly inflated results," and that Virtus Opportunities Trust, the issuer of the misstated registration statements, "did not retract or correct [the] prior misrepresentations" based on the calculation errors. (SAC ¶¶ 54, 78;
Moreover, none of the operative documents that Plaintiffs reviewed in drafting their Second Amended Complaint contain any information from which a Section 10(b) duty to correct claim against VIP or Aylward could plausibly have been asserted. To start, the SEC Consent Orders from December 2014 and November 2015 are directed against F-Squared and Virtus Investment Advisors, respectively. While those orders allege that AlphaSector indices' track record was miscalculated, they do not specify whether anyone at VIP or Aylward learned this information. Further, the December 2014 Consent Order makes no reference to any of the Virtus entities or officers. And the November 2015 Consent Order does not relate to VIP beyond acknowledging that it is the parent company of Virtus Investment Advisors.
Other publicly filed documents in separate actions—namely, the
Even if this Court assumed these allegations theoretically supported a duty to correct claim, it is unclear against whom the claim would have been directed. Defendants seek to lump all the parties together to create the appearance that if a duty to correct arose as early as May 2013, it would have extended to both Aylward and VIP. They point to Aylward and Waltman's position in each of the Virtus entities—either as an officer, director, or control person—to support their contention that Virtus Opportunities Trust or Virtus Investment Advisor's knowledge about the calculation errors should be imputed to each of them. They burnish that position with an allegation from the Second Amended Complaint that Virtus Investment Advisors "shared several of the same officers and directors as VIP and that VIP exercised complete control over [Virtus Investment Advisors] during the Class Period." (Opp. at 16 (citing SAC ¶¶ 25-26).)
But to "establish an inference of scienter, Plaintiff[s] must do more than allege that the Individual Defendants had or should have had knowledge of certain facts contrary to their public statements simply by virtue of their high-level positions."
Defendants also seek to import allegations from the SEC's consent order against Virtus Investment Advisors to VIP by virtue of VIP's ownership and control over Virtus Investment Advisors. But a parent-subsidiary relationship "is not on its own sufficient to impute the scienter of the subsidiary to the parent or affiliate."
"If the part[ies] seeking the amendment satisf[y] the `good cause' standard of Rule 16, the court then determines whether the movant has also met the liberal standards of Rule 15."
Although Rule 15(a) provides that a court "should freely give leave [to amend] when justice so requires[,]" Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2), even under such a liberal standard amendment may be denied "for good reason, including futility, bad faith, undue delay, or undue prejudice to the opposing party."
The issue of delay dovetails with the diligence inquiry underlying the Rule 16 good cause analysis. There are two points in time from which delay can be analyzed. The first is the date on which the Second Amended Complaint was filed—and as discussed earlier, Plaintiffs did not delay bringing their motion to amend as of that date because they did not possess the facts giving rise to their proposed amendment. The second point in time from which delay could be assessed is the moment at which Plaintiffs first learned of these facts—that is, whether they delayed bringing this motion after obtaining the SEC deposition transcripts.
Here, Plaintiffs received those transcripts in January 2017 during the class certification briefing period. Affording Plaintiffs the benefit of some time to review the transcripts, the earliest point at which they reasonably could have apprised this Court of their intention to seek amendment would have been in February or the very beginning of March. That period coincides with oral argument on class certification, which took place on March 3, 2017. But instead of seeking leave from this Court to amend their complaint, let alone providing any indication that they were in possession of new facts or intended to move at some point in the future, Plaintiffs remained silent. Plaintiffs attempt to excuse their silence during this period, claiming that disclosure would have disrupted the litigation, especially since the parties were taking discovery in tandem with the parties in
But by waiting to move to amend until June 2017, Plaintiffs wasted the parties' and the Court's resources on the motion for class certification. Plaintiffs take great pains to characterize their decision to wait as one of courtesy. But there is, in this Court's view, a much simpler explanation—Plaintiffs made an ill-advised gamble hoping for a class certification victory that would obviate the need to seek amendment. (
In any event, while Plaintiffs waited six months after receiving the key SEC deposition transcripts, that hiatus, by itself, is insufficient to constitute undue delay.
Because Plaintiffs have not been accused of engaging in any bad faith, this factor bears no relevance to the amendment analysis.
"Prejudice to the opposing party if the motion is granted has been described as the most important reason for denying a motion to amend."
Defendants contend they will be prejudiced because an amendment would delay adjudicating the remaining claims and result in the expenditure of additional time and resources. (Opp. at 19.) Given that the motion to amend comes at a relatively advanced stage of litigation, especially where the parties have recently completed expert discovery, the most significant expense likely to arise from amendment is revising expert reports. (
Plaintiffs counter that an amendment will necessitate "little to no additional discovery." (Mot. at 15.) But that understates the time, quantity, and scope of new discovery for an omissions-based claim that is fundamentally different from Plaintiffs' previous claim. The parties have long completed expert discovery, and a new theory based on a material omission will, as Plaintiffs concede, substantially alter the parties' expert reports. (
An amendment at this advanced stage of litigation—where both fact and expert discovery has closed, class certification was briefed once before, and the record is otherwise ripe for summary judgment or trial—would unduly prejudice Defendants. Moreover, despite Plaintiffs' assurance that any subsequent motion practice on their amended complaint can be handled expeditiously, the reality is that there are potentially three more motions that may be calendared before this case is ready for trial—a motion to dismiss, motion for class certification, and motion for summary judgment. And asserting an omissions-based claim to qualify for the
Given that Plaintiffs moved to amend after class certification was denied, the "futility of any amendments must be analyzed in light of any future motions for class certification."
The parties' briefs concerning the issue of futility center on the Second Circuit's interpretation of a duty to correct claim, and whether that claim, if predicated on facts that were unknown to a party at the time it made a material misrepresentation, may transform an otherwise positive statement into one of omission. Defendants offer
The Second Circuit's recent decision in
Since its inception, this case has been about the AlphaSector Indices and their underlying track records—namely, that the Defendants misrepresented the back-tested nature of the track records and the calculations underlying them. The Plaintiffs cannot now seek to avoid utilizing those statements by re-configuring the start of the class period. In any event, the proposed amended complaint "alleges numerous affirmative misstatements by the Defendants. The Plaintiffs are therefore not in a situation in which it is impossible for them to point to affirmative misstatements."
Accordingly, since the Plaintiffs are not entitled to the
For the foregoing reasons, in this Court's informed discretion, Plaintiffs' motion to amend is denied. The parties are directed to provide a status report and proposed scheduling order by December 15, 2017. If the parties believe that a conference is warranted, they should indicate that in their status report.
The Clerk of Court is directed to terminate the motion pending at ECF No. 168.